If you follow the advice of the doctors and stay within the regimen they set then there is very a small chance.
If you go skydiving, Snowboarding and doing gymnastics then your chances are greatly increased.
They say its not that easy but I've had it happen in less than a year. Had to redo it with mesh and flaps. So far, so good.
Incisional hernias are also ventral hernias.
There are various places where you can learn about an incisional hernia including: learning from WebMD, this website also shows the causes and treatments of hernias.
The signs and symptoms of an incisional hernia include fever, aching, swelling, visible protrusion, bulging, foul-smelling drainage and many more.
An incisional hernia occurs along a surgical suture line.
patient's symptoms and medical history are the first steps in diagnosing an incisional hernia. All prior surgeries will be discussed. The doctor will ask how much pain the patient is experiencing, when it was first noticed, and how it has progressed
Tension created when sutures are used to close a surgical wound may also be responsible for developing an incisional hernia. Tension is known to influence poor healing conditions because of related swelling and wound separation
either a laparoscopic incisional herniorrhaphy, which uses small incisions and a tube-like instrument with a camera attached to its tip; or a conventional open repair procedure, which accesses the hernia through a larger abdominal incision
better to go for Hernia Specialist Training Course, in that we can find the true specialist.
is pain, with or without a bulge in the abdomen at or near the site of the original surgery. Incisional hernias can increase in size and gradually produce more noticeable symptoms. Incisional hernias may or may not require surgical treatment.
If the hernia is along the line of the surgical wound it is more likely to be an incisional hernia.
An inguinal hernia is the medical term meaning displacement of the intestines through the inguinal canal. Other relatively common types of hernias are umbilical, ventral, and incisional hernias.
I have had two bypass surgeries. I didn't have an incisional hernia after the first one 8 years ago. But about 6 months after the second one the hernia began developing. It is large now, just under the breast bone, but the Doctors say it isn't large enough to do anything about it. It is about 4 inches across and bulges out about 1 inch in a ballooning manner. Wheeeee....